The Horse Fair, large oil painting created in 1852–55 by French realist artist Rosa Bonheur. Bonheur, who learned the fundamentals of art from her father, artist Raymond Bonheur, was famed for her paintings of animals, and The Horse Fair is widely regarded as her masterpiece.
Bonheur’s style changed little throughout her career and remained grounded in realism. Her work was based on accurate observation from nature combined with excellent technical skills. She had a great affection for animals, in particular horses, and her understanding of animals, their nature, and their anatomy is obvious in her paintings. She studied animal anatomy and motion on farms, in stockyards, and at animal fairs and slaughterhouses.
Her enormous canvas The Horse Fair is considered the artist’s greatest work, but is also unusual within her style. Although the foundation of the painting is realist, she approached her subject with a combination of the colour and emotion of the Romantics and in particular was influenced by the work of Théodore Géricault. Bonheur based the scene on sketches she made while visiting the horse market in Paris near the asylum of La Salpêtrière. She made sketching trips twice a week for a year and a half before starting the painting, and on her trips she dressed as a man for practical reasons and to avoid attention from passersby.
The Horse Fair won praise when it was exhibited in the Paris Salon and was shown throughout Britain in 1855–57. It was bought in 1887 by Cornelius Vanderbilt II and immediately donated to New York City’s Metropolitan Museum of Art.